I Never Said Yes sees real victims tell their harrowing tales (Picture: BBC)

I Never Said Yes, BBC3, 9pm

According to the British Crime Survey 2009/2010, a woman is raped every ten minutes in Britain â though thousands of these crimes go unreported, and conviction rates are low. Since this is BBC3, this investigation by Pips Taylor into why this is the case focuses on testimony from young victims, all of whom have been put through the legal mill. Myths and stereotypes surrounding the crime are discussed as well as the cult of blaming the victim: shouldnât the message from prevention groups be âdonât rapeâ rather than âdonât get rapedâ?Â

One Night, BBC1, 10.45pm

Remember that girl who sent uptight kitchen salesman Ted over the edge when she dropped litter? We learn much more about Rochelle (Georgina Campbell), and her weary working mum Carol (Jessica Hynes) in the second episode of this absorbing drama. Rochelleâs story certainly tugs at the heartstrings: now that Tedâs actions have seen her expelled from school, her plans to leave her grotty estate behind for an academic future may well be scuppered.Â

Touch, Sky1, 9pm

Beleaguered widower Martin (Kiefer Sutherland) continues to play the numbers game as he teams up with his silent, autistic son to solve a pawn shop robbery that connects a disparate group of people: a flight attendant, a Russian mobster and an Indian man who has arrived in New York to scatter his fatherâs ashes.

Castle, Alibi, 9pm

The shadow of serial killer Jerry Tyson, aka 3XK, looms large over this latest episode of the genial crime-fighting series. The old service gun that Tyson stole from Detective Ryan has now been used to kill a college girl â who was tutor to the son of a Chinese mobster.

The Man Who Discovered Egypt, BBC4, 9pm

Flinders Petrie is the most famous archaeologist youâve never heard of; he measured the Pyramids, used pioneering new methods to excavate Egyptian archaeological sites and set new standards for the study and recording of artefacts. In short, he was one of those Victorian adventurer types that âstrode the world like a colossusâ âÂ and expert Chris Naunton tells his stirring story with lashings of boyish wonder.Film Choice: Dogtooth, Film4, 11.15pm

Thereâs an unsettling flavour of the Josef Fritzl case about this bizarre, coolly elegant black comedy. Three Greek teenagers are kept in a state of arrested development by their parents whoâve raised them in isolation from the world in a suburban compound. The children still believe the local stray cat will eat them if they attempt escape, but their hormones, at least, are attempting a breakout. One of the oddest Oscar nominees ever.